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666 Annals Am. Acad. Pol. & Soc. Sci. 7 (2016)

handle is hein.cow/anamacp0666 and id is 1 raw text is: Twenty-First-
Century
Globalization
and Illegal
Migration
By
KATHARINE M. DONATO
and
DOUGLAS S. MASSEY

Also labeled undocumented, irregular, and unauthor-
ized migration, illegal migration places immigrants in
tenuous legal circumstances with limited rights and
protections. We argue that illegal migration emerged as
a structural feature of the second era of capitalist glo-
balization, which emerged in the late twentieth century
and was characterized by international market integra-
tion. Unlike the first era of capitalist globalization (1800
to 1929), the second era sees countries limiting and
controlling international migration and creating a
global economy in which all markets are globalized
except for labor and human capital, giving rise to the
relatively new phenomenon of illegal migration. Yet
despite rampant inequalities in wealth and income
between nations, only 3.1 percent of all people lived
outside their country of birth in 2010. We expect this to
change: threat evasion is replacing opportunity seeking
as a motivation for international migration because of
climate change and rising levels of civil violence in the
world's poorer nations. The potential for illegal migra-
tion is thus greater now than in the past, and more
nations will be forced to grapple with growing popula-
tions in liminal legal statuses.
Keywords: illegal migration; globalization; unauthor-
ized migration; undocumented migration;
climate change; violence
M igration is a fundamental means of human
adaption, commonly used both to avoid
risks and access opportunities. Homo sapiens
emerged in East Africa about 150,000 years ago
and through migration settled the entire globe
within a very short span of geological time,
reaching East Asia and Australia about 50,000
years ago, Northern Europe about 40,000 years
ago, the Americas about 12,000 years ago, and
Katharine M. Donato is a professor of sociology at
Vanderbilt University. Her recent work examines the
effects of environmental stress on out-migration from
villages in southwestern Bangladesh. In 2015, she
published (with Donna Gabaccia) Gender and
International Migration: From the Slavery Era to the
Global Age (Russell Sage Foundation).
Correspondence: Katharine. donato@vanderbilt.edu
DOI: 10.1177/0002716216653563

ANNALS, AAPSS, 666, July 2016

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